April 2010
World
Premiere
Enjoy the Music.com Award Of Excellence
Ray Samuels F-117 Nighthawk MC/MM Phono Preamplifier
A real game changer in phonostage preamplification.
Review By Wayne Donnelly
Click here to e-mail reviewer
As regular readers may know, most of
my equipment reviews appear in Enjoy the Music.com's Superior
Audio, and typically cover very ambitious components selling
for very ambitious prices. What excites me so much about this review is that
while the performance of the Ray Samuels F-117 Nighthawk easily warrants its
placement here, the price tag is a happy shock. This forward-looking,
beautifully built, full-featured and sonically superb phono preamp is selling
direct for an introductory price of just $650 through April 30th! On May, the
permanent price of $795 will apply.
For those unfamiliar with Ray Samuels Audio, Ray
is a gifted designer in two areas. He has created some beautiful visually
and sonically tube gear, including the B-52 preamp/headphone amp that I reviewed
here, finding it a top-shelf performer. But his biggest claim to fame is
a series of hot-selling shirt-pocket-sized portable headphone amplifiers, which
seem to get physically smaller and better-sounding with each successive new
model. (Editor's note, we have reviewed of those great little amplifiers and
quite a few other award winning Ray Samuels gear including his Emmeline XR-10B MM/MC
phonostage, Emmeline CA-2
line preamplifier and Emmeline XR-2
phono preamplifier and Emmeline
SR-71 little headphone amplifier.) Ray's exceptional skills and
years of experience in both of those product genres are obviously big factors in
his ability to produce the F-117 Nighthawk. I have rarely encountered any
designer/engineer with such a profound grasp of how to get superior sonics out
of integrated circuits. For decades the most ambitious high-end component makers
made a point of their fully discrete circuitry. ICs primarily offered a more
economical approach to designing good-for-the-money but not state-of-the-art
equipment. But in recent years, initially in the digital arena and now expanding
into broader applications, those little chips have become far more sophisticated
and sonically impressive and that development is dramatically illustrated
with the F-117. (As with all Ray Samuels Audio products, reflecting Ray's years
of working in the aerospace industry, the F-117 Nighthawk is named after a
United States military aircraft.)
A
lot is packed into this little package. The faceplate sports four rotary knobs
for setting load resistance (30, 50, 100, 500, 1K, 47K Ohms) and gain (40 dB to
74 dB in six increments) independently for left and right channels, with a
power-on toggle switch and LED in the center. On the rear panel are pairs of
input and output RCA jacks, a grounding post and a charging jack. Conspicuously
absent is an IEC jack not needed because the F-117 runs on a rechargeable
Lithium Ion battery. It will play for @ 50 hours on a single charge, and
recharges in less than two hours using the supplied charger. Ray designed the
F-117 not to play while charging. That ensures that during use it is always
fully isolated from incoming AC voltage. Until now, every battery-powered
high-end preamp or amplifier I have seen costs considerably more than comparable
conventionally powered components. Battery technology has advanced considerably
in reducing size and increasing efficiency. Let's hope the F-117 is a harbinger
of good things to come. Especially with a phono preamplifier, eliminating the
conduit for RFI/EMF grunge riding on the electrical grid is highly desirable,
especially for a listener like me, dwelling in the electrically noisy canyons of
the Chicago Loop.
A look inside the F-117 reveals an elegantly
clean layout. In such a small device signal paths are extremely short, always a
good thing. Ray Samuels declines to identify the surface-mounted new ICs, and
the part numbers are sanded off. I don't blame him they sound hellaciously
good; why give potential competitors the benefit of his R&D? The
F-117 may be ordered in any of six finish options as pictured below. The brushed
aluminum faceplate, knobs and body are available in either black or
"white" (aluminum tone), and may be mixed in any combination at no
upcharge.
Setup
For this review the F-117 replaced the $4,500
flagship Ray Samuels Emmeline XR-10B, which has been my phono preamp for the
past two years. Since the XR-10B is set up in my system with balanced output, I
replaced my balanced JPS Labs interconnects and Bybee Golden Goddess XLR Bullets
with JPS RCA cables and Bybee Golden Goddess RCA Bullets. I also did a bit of
repositioning components and power cables on my racks to eliminate a small
amount of hum. Even though its battery power isolates the F-117 from the grid,
it like every phono stage I have heard in this location is still
susceptible to airborne and proximity RFI/EMF noise. But everything was hum-free
and shipshape for listening within a few minutes.
The F-117 shares with its costlier sibling XR-10B the very
useful feature of front-panel load resistance adjustment. Many of the phono
preamps I have used require moving jumpers or changing DIP switches, often also
requiring taking the lid off the unit, to adjust this critical setting. My
low-output Dynavector XV-1s cartridge is happiest at 100 ohms, but it was easy
to click down to 50 or up to 500 ohms just to confirm that 100 was the best
setting on the F-117, just as with the XR-10B. This instantaneous load switching
can also serve as an on-demand tone control, useful to ameliorate frequency
deficiencies in some LPs. Higher load settings bring up the high frequencies,
and lower loads give greater emphasis to low frequencies. I played with the
control enough to verify that such changes are instantly audible, but for my
serious listening the setting remained at 100 ohms.
Listening To
The F-117
I received the F-117 just as I was wrapping up
my review of the VPI Aries 3 Rim Drive/Classic platter (also in this issue).
With those listening impressions based on the XR-10B still fresh, it made sense
to return to the same top-quality LPs: Reference Recordings' Nojima
Plays Ravel; the Classic Records single-sided 45 RPM reissues of the
Dorati Firebird on Mercury and Mingus
Ah Um; Mobile Fidelity's Muddy
Waters: Folk Singer and 45 RPM Patricia Barber Verse.
And whaddya know? Every one of those great LPs sounded even better than they had
through the XR-10B! The differences were mainly in the highs, which were more
open abd extended, and to a lesser degree in slightly more solid deep bass.
Background noise, already very low through the XR-10B, was now even quieter,
especially noticeable on solo piano and jazz vocals which validated for me
the benefits of battery over AC power. Dynamics, imaging and soundstaging were
superb through both preamplifiers.
I have preferred the sound of the XR-10B over phono preamps
costing double its $4,500 price, and have more than once trotted out the old
"giant killer" clich้ in describing it. So what does that make the
F-117? The giant-killer killer? This might be distressing to me, were it not
that Ray assured me that my XR-10B could be instantly upgraded by replacing its
four ICs with those used in the F-117.
Upgrades
Fortunately for owners of the XR-10B or the
Emmeline XR-2 an excellent single-ended phono preamplifier that I reviewed
here a few years ago the Ray Samuels is offering DIY upgrade kits for both
products. They are available for $110, which includes USPS shipping, to
customers in the USA; foreign customers should contact the Ray Samuels Audio
website for details on shipping cost. Ray is doing the upgrade on my personal
XR-10B, in deference to my severely impaired eyesight. When it comes back I'll
publish a comment on the sonic differences and the performance of the upgraded
XR-10B compared to the F-117.
NOTE: The modular architecture that enables upgrades by
swapping out old ICs for new in the XR-10B and XR-2 is NOT a feature of the
F-117. To meet cost and size goals for the F-117 all components, including the
new ICs, are permanently surface-mounted. That strikes me as a reasonable
compromise, especially since the new chips deliver such outstanding sound
quality at an outrageously low price.
All new XR-10B or XR-2 phono preamplifiers purchased from now
on will incorporate the new ICs that make the F-117 such a great performer.
Final
Comments
As stated in the header of this review, the Ray
Samuels F-117 Nighthawk phono preamplifier is a game changer. As someone who has
listened to a lot of phono stages, many of them quite expensive, I am simply
dazzled by the remarkable sonic performance and even more so by the
incredible price/performance value of this product. A tip of the cap seems
inadequate; perhaps a deep Japanese-style bow would more appropriately convey my
admiration for Ray Samuels' conceptual creativity and brilliantly achieved
engineering and for his decision to offer this groundbreaking design at such
a low price. I also appreciate that his modular designs and generous upgrade
pricing make these sonic advances easy and affordable to customers who have
bought his previous phono preamplifiers.
I think the natural competition for the F-117 is among phono
stages selling for ten times its price or even more. If you are a vinyl
enthusiast who demands a balanced phono stage, there is the XR-10B. If you are
the kind of hobbyist who gets off on mine-is-bigger-than-yours fancy faceplates
and non-audible bells & whistles, have fun and plan on spending a lot more
money. Even as I anticipate the return of my upgraded XR-10B, I'm keeping the
F-117 Nighthawk. This high-flying bird is just too cool to give back!
Breaking News: Return of the Upgraded XR-10B
Earlier in this review I described the generously priced upgrades available for the Ray Samuels XR-10B and XR-2 phono stages. At this writing I have now been listening to my newly upgraded
XR-10B for about a week; it now has about 50 hours of playing time, so I probably have a small amount of additional improvement to come. What am I hearing? Pretty much all the characteristics described above with the F-117 -- except that the upgraded flagship stage seems to have a touch more low-frequency depth and impact than the new kid on the kid, and slightly greater soundstage width and depth. The operative word here is slightly.
The bottom line here is short and sweet. If you have either of the earlier Ray Samuels phono preamplifiers, get in touch with Ray Samuels and order the upgrade kit. To get this kind of major sonic improvement for $100 plus shipping is a no-brainer. My only complaint about doing the upgrade is that it has reduced my productivity this past week, as I keep thinking of another favorite LP I just have to hear again. I've had worse
problems
Specifications
Type: Battery powered MM/MC phonostage
Frequency Response: 5 Hz to100 KHz
SNR: 78 dB
THD: < 0.03%
Output Impedance: 60 ohms
Active RIAA equalization
L & R rotary switches with 6 gain increments, 40db to 74db.
L & R rotary switches with 6 loads: 30, 50, 100, 500, 1K & 47K ohms.
Power: Rechargeable Lithium ion battery good for ~6 days of playback @ 8 hours per day
Dimensions: 4.4 x 4.25 x 0.8 (WxDxH in inches)
Weight: 0.8 lbs.
Price: Introductory $650 through April 30. $795 thereafter.
Warranty: 3 years unlimited on parts & labor; customer pays shipping, transferable.
Company Information
Ray Smuels Audio
8005 Keeler Ave.
Skokie, IL 60076
Voice: (847) 673-8739
E-mail: rsaudio@raysamuelsaudio.com
Website: www.raysamuelsaudio.com